| Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1894 - 592 pages
...Turks ; and the Sclaves have to some extent been drawn within the sphere of Occidental Reason. Tet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from...an independent element in the series of phases that Eeason has assumed in the World. Whether it will do so hereafter, is a question that does not concern... | |
| Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1900 - 498 pages
...the Turks ; and the Sclaves have to some extent been drawn within the sphere of Occidental Reason. Yet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from...series of phases that Reason has assumed in the World. Whether it will do so hereafter, is a question that does not concern us here ; for in History we have... | |
| 1899 - 524 pages
...from the Turks; and the Sclaves have to some extent been drawn within the sphere of Occidental Reason. Yet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from...series of phases that Reason has assumed in the World. Whether it will do so hereafter, is a question that does not concern us here; for in History we have... | |
| Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1902 - 846 pages
...Turks ; and the Sclaves have to some extent been drawn within the sphere of Occidental Keason. Tet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from...an independent element in the series of phases that Eeason has assumed in the World. Whether it will do so hereafter, is a question that does not concern... | |
| Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1902 - 586 pages
...from the Turks; and tha Sclaves have to some extent been drawn within the sphere of Occidental Season. Yet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from our consideration, because hitherto ii has not appeared as an independent element in the series of phases that Reason has assumed in the... | |
| Shlomo Avineri - 1974 - 270 pages
...from the Turks; and the Slavs have to some extent been drawn within the sphere of occidental reason. Yet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from...series of phases that reason has assumed in the world. Whether it will do so hereafter, is a question that does not concern us here; for in history we have... | |
| George Vernadsky - 1973 - 436 pages
...from the Turks; and the Slavs have to some extent been drawn within the sphere of Occidental Reason. Yet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from...series of phases that Reason has assumed in the World. 5 To what extent German nationalist theories have influenced even modern American scholarship may be... | |
| Perry Anderson - 1996 - 308 pages
...his view of the history of the eastern region of the continent was closely similar to that of Ranke. ‘Yet this entire body of peoples remains excluded...an independent element in the series of phases that a. Leopold Von Ranke, Gesc/sichte Ir Ron,aniscA.n wad GirmaniscAsa VoIk¿r was :494 hu :5:, Leipzig... | |
| Martin Malia - 1999 - 534 pages
...liberated beleaguered Vienna from the Turks; and a part of the Slavs were conquered by Western Reason. Yet this entire body of peoples remains excluded from...because hitherto it has not appeared as an independent phase in the series of configurations of Reason in the world. Whether it will happen hereafter does... | |
| Ermanno Bencivenga - 2000 - 160 pages
...ellipse, whether it is not perhaps an oval" (Nature 72). "[The] entire body of peoples [of Eastern Europe] remains excluded from our consideration, because hitherto...series of phases that reason has assumed in the world. Whether it will do so hereafter, is a question that does not concern us here" (History 350)—because... | |
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